CLI
Boundary’s CLI has predictable behavior throughout its various commands. This page details the common patterns in used in order to help users make better use of the CLI.
Completion
Before detailing how parameters work, it’s useful to note that Boundary’s CLI supports autocompletion, which allows tab completion of commands, flags, and in some cases the parameters to those flags.
This can be installed via the CLI itself:
boundary config autocomplete install
If you want to install it manually, for Bash, the following line in a ~/.bash_profile
or similar file will work:
complete -C /path/to/boundary boundary
Parameter Handling
All parameters specified on the CLI are specified as a Go-style flag with a single dash, e.g. -id
. The arguments to those flags can be specified via an equals sign, as in -id=r_1234567890
, or a space, like -id r_1234567890
.
To see available parameters, pass the -h
flag to any command.
Flags are semi-position dependent. The flags must come after the command definition, but are otherwise order independent.
For instance, the following are equivalent:
But the following results in an error:
This applies to -h
as well!
Clearing/Defaulting Values
On the CLI, you can use null
as a value to indicate to Boundary that you want to unset a value, reverting to Boundary’s default. In many cases this default will be empty (e.g. for a name
or description
parameter) but in other cases it’s not. For instance, for a password auth method’s minimum password length, the default is not 0
but rather 8
. Additionally, attempting to set string values to the empty string ""
is usually not an allowed operation, since when set to a specific value it must be non-empty. Using null
to clear a value ensures you’ll revert to Boundary’s recommended default.
null
is used because of the fact that the API is JSON. Using null
as the value causes the key for the parameter to be inserted into the eventual API call’s JSON object but with the value set to the JSON null
. This in turn informs the Controller that this value should be set to its default. Keep in mind that this is not a direct translation to database NULL
semantics!
Connection Options
Every command that results in an API call contains a set of flags that control connection options, which control TLS and other settings for the connection.
Client Options
Every command that results in an API call contains a set of flags that control client options. Some notable options:
output-curl-string
: This will format the command that would have been run as a string usingcurl
that can be used directly on the command line. This is a great way to discover how CLI functions map to API calls.token-name
: When the CLI authenticates, it stores the token in the platform-specific OS credential store. By using thetoken-name
parameter, more than one token can be stored at a time. Specifying this parameter at authentication time uses the given name as part of the key for storage; specifying it for any other command will cause the corresponding token to be used for that call.recovery-config
: This is used to specify a configuration file that contains the information necessary to access a KMS configured to be used for the recovery workflow within a Boundary controller.
Output Options
Nearly every command supports having its success output be formatted as JSON via -format json
. For commands that result in an API call, the JSON output will be the exact output from the controller. If using the output of the CLI in scripts or as parameters to other tools, always use formatted output. The default text output is meant for human users and the formatting or the information included within that output from the original JSON may change at any time.
Mapping to Collections and Sub-Types
Generally speaking, Boundary’s CLI commands map to the collections they operate on. For instance, when operating on roles, the command will be boundary roles ...
.
As a result, the patterns for reading, deleting, and listing are predictable:
read
and delete
will always operate on a particular resource identifier, so will always take in an -id
parameter. list
operates on collections so will either take a -scope-id
parameter or, depending on type, a higher level resource identifier, e.g. -auth-method-id
.
Creating and updating resources may take an extra parameter if the resource type is abstract, that is, if the type cannot be operated on directly but must be operated on through an implementation. As an example, a role is not an abstract type, and does not have various implementations of it. As a result, a role can be operated on directly:
However, a target can be one of many types of targets, and a concrete implementation of a target is a tcp
type of target. Therefore an extra parameter is required when creating or updating a target:
This allows the CLI to perform proper presentation and validation of parameters and functions for the given type.
Similar to read
, update
operates on an existing target so will always take an -id
parameter. Similar to list
, create
operates on a collection so will either take a -scope-id
parameter or a parameter defining the parent resource.